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News

LOCAL NEWS

Immigrant rights groups combat negative media perceptions

Throughout his campaign for president, Barak Obama pushed a platform that included immigration reform. More »

Dot college prep inspires young minds

Lisa Andrade, now 18, dropped out of Elizabeth Seton Academy when she was 16 years old. Like many teenagers, Andrade was caught up in her social life, found school boring and wasn't taking it seriously. More »

In Murray, Mass. Gov. Patrick finds loyal defender

Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick largely stays above the political fray, not because of his Ivy League background, but because of his scrappy No. 2. More »

Two more candidates in Mass. governor's race

Two more candidates have jumped into the race for Massachusetts governor, including a Democratic challenger to Gov. Deval Patrick. More »

NATIONAL NEWS

Black farmers urged to call lawmakers on settlement

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Black farmers must strongly lobby Sen. Blanche Lincoln and other lawmakers to make sure Congress approves a $1.15 billion discrimination settlement, the head of the National Black Farmers Association said Saturday. More »

Senate likely to be less diverse after Nov. elections

CHICAGO - That historically all-white club known as the U.S. Senate is likely to lose what little diversity it has after November?s elections. More »

Asylum hearing for Obama aunt ends with no ruling

An immigration hearing for President Barack Obama's African aunt ended last Thursday without an immediate decision in her second bid for asylum in the United States. More »

Farm to School program changes kids' views on food

SHARON, VT. - The third and fourth graders at Sharon Elementary know where the veggies in their soup come from because they've visited the farms. They know the nutritional value of the carrots, onions and cabbage because they've studied them in class, and they know how they're grown because they've nurtured them in raised beds out back. More »

Doris Miller

Doris "Dorie" Miller was among four Navy sailors commemorated for their bravery and distinction with a U.S. Postal Service first-class stamp. More »

Obama shares views on Black History Month

In the centuries since African Americans first arrived on our shores, they have known the bitterness of slavery and oppression, the hope of progress and the triumph of the American Dream. More »

Black Revolutionary War soldier honored

ZEBULON, Ga. - When Virginia genealogist Joseph Dooley visited Pike County last weekend, he brought along a print of the famous painting, "Washington Crossing the Delaware," by Emanuel Leutze. More »

Artist paints black history

Hank Kearsley is a teacher at heart. Viewers of "Quest for Freedom: A Visual History," the 80-year-old artist's exhibit at the Piano Factory Gallery this month, will surely encounter some history not often taught in schools. More »

Mississippi man became first African American pilot

Jesse L. Brown, the first black naval aviator, and the first to die serving his country, was a pioneer in the civil rights movement, but he didn't really feel like he was leading a movement, said his widow, Daisy Pearl Brown Thorne. More »

WORLD NEWS

Haitians begin to return to unprepared capital

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - A half-million Haitians who fled their shattered capital after the earthquake are starting to return to a maze of rubble piles, refugee camps and food lines, complicating ambitious plans to build a better Haiti. More »

10 Americans charged in Haiti with kidnapping

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - Ten U.S. Baptist missionaries were charged with kidnapping last week for trying to take 33 children out of Haiti to a hastily arranged refuge just as officials were trying to protect children from predators in the chaos of a great earthquake. More »


HEALTH

Vitamin D: A dose of sunshine goes a long way

Born and raised in Haiti, Gerda Paulissaint, 46, came to Boston about 12 years ago and a funny thing happened. She started having all sorts of aches and pains. Walking up a flight of stairs was particularly painful. "It was as if my legs were talking back to me," she remembers. More »

The man to see on vitamin D

Of all Douglas Fairhurst's medical problems, the most bewildering were his weakening muscles. An avid bicyclist, Fairhurst, 74, could barely lift his leg much less pedal a bike. "I could hardly walk," he said. More »